anand_singh

1.6K posts

anand_singh

anand_singh

@anand_singh

Every accomplishment starts with the decision to try!!

New Delhi, India Katılım Eylül 2008
241 Takip Edilen67 Takipçiler
anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@RailMinIndia @drm_lko @MoradabadNr Very disgusting to say that #train 14207 Padmavat exp reached lucknow outet 30 min before time and at lucknow it got delayed by 1.5 hrs..still not reached amroha..other trains are crossing it.
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Somesh Pal | Fitness Coach
Somesh Pal | Fitness Coach@SomeshPal·
82 to 74kg. Most of the change came from the belly. The part everyone wants gone and almost nobody knows how to actually move. 50 likes and I will share his entire diet plan right here.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ DM “Start” to get yours
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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@theliverdoc Hello Doc! Any dates for Delhi NCR events..All the best!!
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TheLiverDoc™
TheLiverDoc™@theliverdoc·
Today is the last day of this month. The next month, of May 2026 is important for me. I am not sure I can explain how important it is for me, because a childhood dream of mine will take shape in May. I am stepping out of my work shoes and entering a place where I am free. From student to doctor, doctor to clinician, clinician to scientist, and now finally, clinical-scientist to author. It reminds me of this quote - “Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better.” - Maya Angelou And just like that, I receive this message from my audiobook narrator artist today morning. It felt good see that first "review" from someone who has gone through it all. And it made me happy. My first book, the non-fiction from @HarperCollinsIN will release next week. I hope you've all had the chance to pre-book it, so that you can make my stories yours too. Stories that will stay with you long after you finish that last page. This is the publisher's press release on my book: harpercollins.co.in/press-release/… This is a preview discussion of the book from an independent source: theindianbookclub.com/readers-point/… This is where you can pre-order my book: amazon.in/Liver-Doctor-S… Finally its begining. There will be further announcements on author interactions and book signing sessions from @HarperCollinsIN. I hope we can meet at the time. Kochi, Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai and possibly Mumbai in the works. Thanks again!
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Nainsi Dwivedi
Nainsi Dwivedi@NainsiDwiv50980·
BREAKING: AI can now diagnose diseases like a Harvard doctor (for free). Here are 10 insane Perplexity prompts that replace $500/hour medical consultations: (Save for later)
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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@RapidoCares So disgusting...
anand_singh@anand_singh

@RapidoCares This driver of yours kept me waiting for 30 mim at midnight on 23/2 even he was 2 min away & finally did not come. He was also on #Ola app & picked my ride when I booked on Ola from the same place as amount was higher. This isjust not done..he must be penalised.

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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@RapidoCares This driver of yours kept me waiting for 30 mim at midnight on 23/2 even he was 2 min away & finally did not come. He was also on #Ola app & picked my ride when I booked on Ola from the same place as amount was higher. This isjust not done..he must be penalised.
anand_singh tweet mediaanand_singh tweet media
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SrDOM Prayagraj
SrDOM Prayagraj@SrDOM_PRYJ·
@drmncrald @RailwaySeva @anand_singh Train getting delayed due weather condition(fog). bunching created causing further delay. instruction has been given to provide clear passage to concerned controller
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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@drmncrald @RailMinIndia Dear All, why train#22438 Pryj Humsafar is repeatedly running quite late. Average delay is more than 5 hrs that is quite unheard of ...
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Nirmal Pandey MD DM Neurologist
Nirmal Pandey MD DM Neurologist@nirmalregency·
I had been a bit sceptical about generics till now. But many of our epilepsy patients were economically hard pressed for branded medicines, so I often used to suggest Jan Aushadhi drugs. Though this study did not examine them in particular, but I can now have more confidence in guiding them for it if so desired by them. Thanks Doc. You made the day for many clinicians and patients of our country. Salute.
TheLiverDoc™@theliverdoc

STAY WITH ME. A few years ago, a patient was referred to me because he was diagnosed with complicated cirrhosis. He had an infection which led to a condition called hepatic encephalopathy (brain failure due to high ammonia levels). The treatment largely involved ammonia reducing therapies. One drug was central to this - Rifaximin - a non-absorbable antibiotic that reduced ammonia in the body. I prescribed him Rifaximin for 6 weeks and advised him follow-up. He came back to me, not after six weeks, but in 4 weeks, this time, in liver coma (worst stage of brain failure - due to very high ammonia). He spent two days in the ICU and six days in total in the hospital. His hospital bill was close to INR 80,000. He had no insurance and his wife borrowed the money from neighbors and friends to clear hospital dues. Upon questioning, I found that he was not taking the Rifaximin drug I had prescribed. He was only on the other two drugs (one, a syrup called lactulose for improving ammonia clearance in gut). I was furious, because the patient spent a whole week unecessarily in the ICU and wasted so much money that he never had - just because he was "not compliant" to my orders. I decided it was time for me to school him a bit. But I was wrong. He was compliant. He had purchased Rifaximin and was on it. For 15 days. Thereafter, he could not afford it. He was an autorickshaw driver who shuttled school children every morning and evening. He could hardly make ends meet. He had two children of his own. The Rifaximin brand I prescribed him was 42 rupees per tablet. He had to consume two a day - which would mean 2520 rupees a month. He just did not have that money - so he skipped it - to not compromise on other important matters - childrens education and food. He was confused and scared about opting for a cheaper version of Rifaximin because one, he was unsure about the quality of Rifaximin that was not prescribed by me and two, he was "scared" that I would scold him for buying a cheaper Rifaximin and if that got him into trouble. I was confused and scared about prescribing a cheaper version of Rifaximin because one, I was unsure about the quality of Rifaximin that was not "a good promoted brand" and two, I was "scared" that his family would scold me for prescribing a cheaper Rifaximin and if that got him into trouble. It is heartbreaking that many doctors still simply don’t trust generic medicines. Too often, they worry that these cheaper options are lower quality or might cause more problems than the big, famous brands. This fear leads them to prescribe expensive drugs instead, and the real tragedy is that it pushes vital healthcare out of reach for the ordinary people who need it most - like my patient. This narrative, that generic drugs 'are never good' and that only big pharmaceutical marketed drugs are what works has been deeply ingrained into doctors and patients alike - I do not know by whom and since when. Looking back, these strong emotions were based on either opinions, testimonials or second- and third-hand information. Not evidence. Like I said. Stay with me. This is life changing and will disrupt the drug market in India. Here are the results of The Citizens Generic vs. Brand Drugs Quality Project. 1/11

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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@theliverdoc Inredible work. Thank you Dr. for enlightening us. GOD Bless!!
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TheLiverDoc™
TheLiverDoc™@theliverdoc·
PS: The original reports and full study summary of all 131 drugs analysis will be available on meshindia.org within a week for you to download, review, check and share. Thanks again and take care. We will be back with new public health projects soon.
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TheLiverDoc™
TheLiverDoc™@theliverdoc·
STAY WITH ME. A few years ago, a patient was referred to me because he was diagnosed with complicated cirrhosis. He had an infection which led to a condition called hepatic encephalopathy (brain failure due to high ammonia levels). The treatment largely involved ammonia reducing therapies. One drug was central to this - Rifaximin - a non-absorbable antibiotic that reduced ammonia in the body. I prescribed him Rifaximin for 6 weeks and advised him follow-up. He came back to me, not after six weeks, but in 4 weeks, this time, in liver coma (worst stage of brain failure - due to very high ammonia). He spent two days in the ICU and six days in total in the hospital. His hospital bill was close to INR 80,000. He had no insurance and his wife borrowed the money from neighbors and friends to clear hospital dues. Upon questioning, I found that he was not taking the Rifaximin drug I had prescribed. He was only on the other two drugs (one, a syrup called lactulose for improving ammonia clearance in gut). I was furious, because the patient spent a whole week unecessarily in the ICU and wasted so much money that he never had - just because he was "not compliant" to my orders. I decided it was time for me to school him a bit. But I was wrong. He was compliant. He had purchased Rifaximin and was on it. For 15 days. Thereafter, he could not afford it. He was an autorickshaw driver who shuttled school children every morning and evening. He could hardly make ends meet. He had two children of his own. The Rifaximin brand I prescribed him was 42 rupees per tablet. He had to consume two a day - which would mean 2520 rupees a month. He just did not have that money - so he skipped it - to not compromise on other important matters - childrens education and food. He was confused and scared about opting for a cheaper version of Rifaximin because one, he was unsure about the quality of Rifaximin that was not prescribed by me and two, he was "scared" that I would scold him for buying a cheaper Rifaximin and if that got him into trouble. I was confused and scared about prescribing a cheaper version of Rifaximin because one, I was unsure about the quality of Rifaximin that was not "a good promoted brand" and two, I was "scared" that his family would scold me for prescribing a cheaper Rifaximin and if that got him into trouble. It is heartbreaking that many doctors still simply don’t trust generic medicines. Too often, they worry that these cheaper options are lower quality or might cause more problems than the big, famous brands. This fear leads them to prescribe expensive drugs instead, and the real tragedy is that it pushes vital healthcare out of reach for the ordinary people who need it most - like my patient. This narrative, that generic drugs 'are never good' and that only big pharmaceutical marketed drugs are what works has been deeply ingrained into doctors and patients alike - I do not know by whom and since when. Looking back, these strong emotions were based on either opinions, testimonials or second- and third-hand information. Not evidence. Like I said. Stay with me. This is life changing and will disrupt the drug market in India. Here are the results of The Citizens Generic vs. Brand Drugs Quality Project. 1/11
TheLiverDoc™ tweet media
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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@IndiaPostOffice Hi yes..its done but took more than 8 days .even though the article had arrived at Ballabhgarh SO earlier & they kept sending it from PO to another. Pls do something with pin -121004 as it is our area code but all our posts go to Ballabhgarh SO & they keep sending it other PO.
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India Post
India Post@IndiaPostOffice·
@anand_singh R/Sir, As per tracking the article was delivered on 13.12.2025 by Delivery Center NH4 Faridabad.
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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@theliverdoc One quick question...how to get your valued opd consultation online...long due:)
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TheLiverDoc™
TheLiverDoc™@theliverdoc·
Obviously this was needed. High time medical doctors stop prescribing herbal garbage. But what about all those Ayurveda graduates who prescribe modern medicines right, left and center or add modern medicines to their herbal mumbo-jumbo to make it work? And don't give me that lame argument that they "learn modern medicine textbooks" during Bachelors degree in Ayurveda course. Just because someone travelled by plane multiple times doesn't make them a fighter pilot.
TheLiverDoc™ tweet media
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anand_singh
anand_singh@anand_singh·
@BCCI What a mockery of the game...weird decisions in #IndA vs Bang A at Oman in Emerging nations cup..the IPL tigers are made to eat humble pie.
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